Thursday, March 1, 2018

March / April 2018
















I am happy to have writer/producer Shirley Neal as a guest writer for this installment. She shares this inspirational story of survival and hope through art. Enjoy!

UGANDA-BASED “DANCE OF HOPE” LAUNCHES LONG AWAITED NORTH AMERICAN TOUR

Some of the most exquisite music to come out of Africa has emanated not just from the big stages and music festivals, but from an orphanage in a remote Ugandan village. There, a small group of children—displaced from their homes with only the clothes on their backs, and instruments in hand—were trained to create music and dance that touches the soul. Today, their stage art serves as a platform to celebrate life and explore African history, culture, and the continent’s vibrant arts. World-renown Ugandan singer and multi-instrumentalist, Kinobe (pronounced chi-no-bay), is credited with mentoring and nurturing their talents. “Their music was their only voice and light,” he shares. “Many of the children have been through the most horrific life experiences with no love or support from family. Most lived in poverty, yet they were making such beautiful music that the world would have otherwise never known.” In them, Kinobe saw the hope that he had while growing up in an impoverished community. He believed that with his help they too could be transformed by the power of music. With regular training sessions at the M-Lisada orphanage, he nurtured them to perfect their talents in music as well as dance. Two years later, Kinobe teamed with M-Lisada founder, Segawa Bosco, and Ukranian-born real estate investor and property developer, Dima Itskovich to form DANCE OF HOPE. The non-profit performing arts organization uses the primal transforming power of music, dance and storytelling to educate and empower young people to become independent global citizens and improve life quality in impoverished communities. February 2018, the touring arm of DANCE OF HOPE launched the first leg of its long-awaited North American tour. From the very first drumbeat, and for 45 minutes to 1½ breathtaking hours, audiences are transported on an exhilarating journey to Africa like they’ve never experienced before. The costuming is traditional. The instruments are authentic and handmade. The music is a harmonious fusion of rhythms from East, West, South, and North Africa. Throughout the interactive performances, members of the DANCE OF HOPE ensemble—ranging in ages from 9-17—share their triumphant human turnaround stories to show how music and dance gave them hope and resilience to survive and affect change. It was Nelson Mandela who once said, “The curious beauty of African music is that it uplifts even as it tells a sad tale. You may be poor, you may have only a ramshackle house, you may have lost your job. That song gives you hope.” DANCE OF HOPE is a testament to his words. Through their performances, they inspire people from all walks of life to achieve greatness.  As an added treat, Kinobe—best known for his soothing, meditative “music with a message”—performs solo ahead of each performance with selections from his new CD, The Voice Within. A full schedule of tour dates now through June is available at http://www.danceofhope.com/tour. The second half of the tour kicks off September 2018 with dates in Los Angeles and throughout the west and east coasts. “When we’re on the stage, DANCE OF HOPE delivers a night to remember,” Kinobe promises. “Our children, the music, the dances, and storytelling will captivate the entire family. The show is quite a journey—not to be missed!” Kinobe’s “The Voice Within” CD is available on iTunes, CDBaby.com, Amazon.com, and through Spotify. For more information and bookings or to set up an interview contact: info@kinobemusic.com.
Like them on Facebook at: Dance of Hope.

Highlights

The  Musée Unterlinden in Colmar France underwent a renovation and expansion in 2016. In the Alsace region, the museum has been in existence since 1853 and is home to Gruenwald’s Medieval masterpiece, Isenheim Altarpiece, as well as one of only 3 tapestries of Guernica approved by Picasso. It also has a large collection of Dubuffet artwork. At the moment the museum is hosting a retrospective, Photographic Adventures: Adolphe Braun, which will continue through May 14, 2018. One of the 19th century’s most influential pioneers of the new photographic process, his prints were sold all over Europe and North America. On display are many original prints, some never seen before, as well as around twenty paintings and prints by Monet, Courbet, and several other well-known artists. Also included is camera equipment from leading French photographic collections and glass plate negatives from historic archives. As a must see for photography fans, the museum’s website at www.musee-unterlinden.com, is very informative.

Where you can see my artwork

My artwork is available at Rons. For further information call the shop at 805.489.4747. Rons is located at 850 W. Grand in Grover Beach a few blocks from the train station, a golf course and the beautiful Pacific Ocean. For more information go to Rons website at www.ronsingroverbeach.com or find him on Facebook.

Not To Be Missed –Museum Exhibits

Catalina Island, just 26 miles off the coast of California, is celebrating the reopening of The Catalina Island Museum, which is hosting Destination Paradise: 100 Years of Catalina Advertising Design through April 22, 2018. The exhibit focuses on methods of advertising the island as a tourist destination and covers the years from 1880–1980. Also at the museum is Jose Guadalupe Posada: Legendary Printmaker of Mexico as a special exhibition. The printmaker captured daily life in Mexico from his artist’s perspective from 1889-1913 and influenced future artists like Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera. Featured along with his artwork are his original printing plates. Find out more about the Catalina Island Museum and these shows at www.catalinamuseum.org and take a tour.

Featured now at the Palm Springs Museum of Art through June 18, 2018 is Grass Roots: Native American Basketry of the West. The exhibit showcases the wonderful weaving of these Native American artists who used native plants and roots as their medium. The museum also has a subsidiary museum in Palm Desert known as the Galen. It is surrounded by the four acre Faye Sarkowsky Sculpture Garden that features over ten significant sculptures surrounded by landscaped gardens. A visit to these two venues make it worth the drive. Google the museum or go to www.psmuseum.org for current information.

I am looking forward to Art Colony: The Laguna Beach Art Association, 1918-1935 at the Laguna Museum which starts June 24 – January 13, 2019. My mother and I spent many wonderful times in Laguna wandering through the various art galleries. Many were off the beaten track. Celebrating the centennial of the beginning of the art association in this beautiful beach town, the exhibit features paintings by many of its founders. If you are as anxious as I am to see it, take the time to get a preliminary look at www.lagunaartmuseum.org and learn more about this exhibit.

First Americans: Tribal Art From North America is at the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana April 7–August 19, 2018. Many items come from the museum’s own collection and cover the Arctic, the Northwest Coast, California, the Southwest and the Great Plains. Included in the show are an early example of a transitional Navajo First Phase Chief’s blanket, an early Hopi Katsina doll and a rare Seri feathered kilt from Baja, California. For many more facts go to www.bowers.org to find some interesting information.

Highlights of the Permanent Collection celebrates the Santa Barbara Museum of Art’s 75th anniversary. The exhibit features some of the museum’s most well-known pieces. The Armand Hammer Foundation has loaned some amazing Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings to the Santa Barbara Museum of Art. Of course, Portrait of Mexico Today, painted by David Alfaro Siqueiros while living in political exile in Los Angeles in 1932, has a home in the front façade of the museum. It is intact and is in a protected spot. We are so lucky to have it. Crosscurrents: The Painted Portrait in America, Britain, and France, 1750-1850 runs through May 27, 2018 with its companion show, Crosscurrents: American and European Portrait Photographs, 1840-1900. The first canvases the paintings that were done for prominent clients before the invention of the photograph. The second covers the early skills of portrait photographers. Check online at www.sbmuseart.org/ for more details.

Taking Shape: Degas as Sculptor is at the Norton Simon in Pasadena. This exhibit is culled from the museum’s extensive collection of art work by Degas. During the artist’s lifetime he only displayed one of his sculptures publically. Celebrating the centenary of his death, this show is up through April 9, 2018. Degas made wax and plaster models throughout his career and only 74 were cast in bronze. Shown here are the museum’s collection of bronzes alongside two dimensional works by Degas. For more on this show go to www.nortonsimon.org and get information on upcoming exhibits also.

Damien Hirst: The Veil Paintings is at the Gagosian Gallery in Beverly Hills until the middle of April. Less outrageous than his earlier work, the artist’s veil series pays homage to artists George Seurat and Pierre Bonnard. Of course, more information is available at www.gagosian.com, the gallery’s website.

Now at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art is Found In Translation: Design In California And Mexico, 1915–1985. The exhibit covers Spanish Colonial Inspiration, Pre-Hispanic Revivals, Folk Art and Craft Traditions and Modernism as design parameters. It also attempts to place such design icons as Neutra, Barragan and Charles and Ray Eames in context and shows how California and Mexico influenced each other in design and architecture. It runs through April 1, 2018. More information is at www.lacma.org about these exhibits.

On view until May 27, 2018 at Getty Center in Los Angeles is Paper Promises: Early American Photography which promises to be an interesting survey of the origins of the process. It features albumen silver prints, daguerreotypes and salted paper prints among others. Information at www.getty.edu will fill you in on what is going on as well as with dates and times.

The Broad Art Foundation houses the collection of Eli and Edythe Broad and has an amazing number of modern masterpieces. It also hosts special exhibits. Something Resembling Truth runs from February through May 18, 2018, which features more than 100 works by Jasper Johns. The show explores the artist's sixty year career and includes many of his most iconic works and several that have never been seen in Los Angeles. This is an interesting venue and the Johns exhibit will be important. In anticipation, check out www.thebroad.org to get an early view.

Right now ensconced at the de Young Museum in San Francisco is Revelations: Art from the African American South celebrating the recent acquisition from the Souls Grown Deep Foundation in Atlanta. This exhibit features 62 pieces by contemporary southern artists and will be at the museum until April 1, 2018. Concurrent is a companion exhibit featuring work by the quilters of Gees Bend, Alabama and prints by Lonnie Holley. Check www.deyoung.famsf.org which will have all you need to know. The de Young prides itself in making its exhibits accessible and has instituted a plan for people who are unable to come to the museum whether for medical reasons, distance or finances.  They have two robots that will take visitors on a tour via the internet. Rebecca Bradley is the Accessibility Curator. You can email her office at access@famsf.org if this great idea is of interest.

The San Francisco Legion of Honor acts as host to Casanova: The Seduction of Europe through May 28, 2018. It seems that he was not only a lover but a traveler. Tales of his conquests took in a large amount of the continent and even included a meeting with Catherine the Great of Russia. The show sets the tone of his world in the eighteenth century by bringing together paintings, sculpture, works on paper, furnishings, porcelain, silver and period costumes. Check out www.legionofhonor.famsf.org and get more information.

San Francisco seems to be the happening place at the moment. Louise Bourgeois Spiders is at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art until September 4, 2018. The sculptor started this series in the ‘90s when she was in her eighties. The art of Robert Rauschenberg is celebrated in a retrospective of the artist’s work on view through March 23, 2018. Robert Rauschenberg: Erasing the Rules covers the artist’s career from 1940 until his death in 2008. He worked in every medium, exploring with mud and scavenged material. Over 150 pieces including prints, sculptures, paintings and Combines are represented. Go to https://www.sfmoma.org for more on this exciting show.

Ongoing at the Seattle Museum of Art is Big Picture: Art after 1945.The exhibit includes some amazing works by Rothko, Motherwell, Newman, Hoffman, etc, and there are interesting videos on the museum website. Go to www.seattleartmuseum.org to obtain more information. Wow!!! Figuring History: Robert Colescott, Kerry James Marshal, Mickalene Thomas is on view until May 13, 2018. Featuring three different generations of artists who all speak in their own way about the history of black culture…if you can’t attend be sure to go online to get a feel of this show. The images are stunning. I am especially partial to School of Beauty, School of Culture and its bow to various iconic images. All are wonderful and the interactive videos online are great!

The Museum of Fine Arts Houston hosts The Glamour and Romance of Oscar de la Renta. The exhibit, which has been extended again through March 18, 2018, is curated by Andre Leon Talley, long time editor-at-large for Vogue Magazine. It celebrates the career of the designer. His family and the house of de la Renta have cooperated in this show, which contains 70 ensembles as examples of his work. Many of his creations were worn by celebrities. His wedding dress for Amal Clooney, which was the last that he designed before his death, is in this show. It is always wonderful to see great design and www.mfah.org will provide all the information.

The Clyfford Still Museum in Denver continues to present intriguing shows. Spotlight 02: A Study in Connoisseurship, A Newly Discovered Painting from the Yukon is up through April 29, 2018. This exhibit takes the viewer through the vetting process. A double sided painting was presented to the museum as a potential early work by Still but it is undocumented. This is one of the classic mysteries in the art world…is the artwork authentic or not? Check out www.clyffordstillmuseum.org for all the details.

The Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City, Missouri features Through The Eyes Of Picasso, which is on view through April 8, 2018. This exhibit focuses on the impact of Oceanic and African art on the artist’s work and includes many of the objects he collected that inspired him. The museum’s website at www.nelson-atkins.org will provide more information.

The Art Institute of Chicago is hosting Mirroring China’s Past: Emperors and Their Bronzes until May 13, 2018. Collected through the ages by Chinese rulers, these ornate bronzes from the second and first millennia BC were highly prized. Unlike Greek and Roman bronzes that depicted human and animal forms, the Chinese used these in rituals. This show brings together about 180 works of art from the museum’s own collection, the Palace Museum in Beijing, the Shanghai Museum, as well as from other museums and private collections in the United States. More details are at www.artic.edu for this fascinating exhibit.

The Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington D.C. is the culmination of over a century of work. Founding Director Lonnie Bunch said that “The African American experience is the lens through which we understand what it is to be an American.” The website welcomes us with its opening words: A People’s Journey, A Nation’s Story. It is part of our national history. The museum contains much memorabilia, including both negative and positive. Of course, there is much history here including examples of slave ships. However, there are more current examples, including Carl Lewis’ journey, clothes from James Brown and Pearl Bailey, a trumpet owned by Louis Armstrong and Chuck Berry’s red Cadillac. Items also includes some owned by Harriet Tubman, the dress Rosa Parks was sewing when she refused to leave her seat, and clothes designed by Geoffrey Holder for the award winning Broadway play The Wiz. Areas include a sports museum and a visual arts museum among others. The only permanent art exhibit on the mall will be Visual Art and the American Experience, which focuses on the contribution Americans of African descent made to the history of American Art. The galleries will also feature changing exhibits so check out www.nmaahc.si.edu for information.

Coming March 25-July 1, 2018 The National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. features Cezanne Portraits. This exhibit, which is the first to feature the artist’s portraiture, is travelling the world. It brings together 60 examples of Cezanne’s work culled from collections around the world. It has proved to be a wonderful show with examples at www.nga.gov for you to enjoy.

While you are in Washington D.C you might also want to take a look at the Hillwood Estate Museum and Gardens, the final home of Marjorie Merriweather Post. She was a collector and her home is open with special exhibits. The month of March has been designated Orchid Month. Currently through June 10, 2018 is The Artistic Table. The tables have been designed by current tastemakers using historic pieces. Following in June is Fabergé Rediscovered. If you are a lover of the decorative arts this is a good place to go and www.hillwoodmuseum.org will give you information and reveal some of her amazing pieces of eye candy.

On view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art through September 9, 2018 is Design in Revolution: A 1960s Odyssey. Featuring the museum’s collection of Rock and Roll posters from that tumultuous time as well as a series of images of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., this show will surely bring back memories for many and inform others about the history of the era. This exhibit is described on the museum website at www.philamuseum.org with more information about other shows as well.

Currently at the Albright-Knox Museum in Buffalo, New York is Matisse and the Art of Jazz, which ends May 27, 2018. Matisse’s experimentation with cut-outs is well known. Jazz is the only book written and illustrated by the artist. The Albright-Knox has assembled all 20 illustrated plates from the book. Also included are additional works by Matisse. Their website at www.albrightknox.org has some interesting video on the show.

Baya: The Women of Algiers marks the North American debut of this artist. At the Grey Gallery at NYU from January 9 – March 31, 2018, the artist inspired Matisse and Picasso and later collaborated with Picasso at the Madoura pottery studio Vallauris. Her work is colorful and wonderful so check it out at www.greyartgallery@nuy.edu and get more info.

The New York Historical Society has a beautiful website that you must see. At the museum itself the fourth floor has been turned into a Gallery of Tiffany Lamps from the museum’s extensive collection. This ongoing exhibit features 100 lamps, many designed by women. Starting in November and ongoing is Audubon’s Birds of America Focus Gallery which will display watercolor models for the artist’s work, The Birds of America. The society also has Picasso’s Le Tricorne on display. The painted theater curtain from the ballet was produced in 1919. Visitors can also have a look at Ed Ruscha’s Fanned Book from 2013. There is much to see at this great venue so check out www.nyhistory.org and prepare to be surprised by all the wonderful historical pieces on view.

Coming this summer to the Museum of Modern Art in New York is Constantin Brancusi Sculpture from the museum’s collection of his work. The show runs from July 22-February 24, 2019 and features 11 of his works as well as photos and other archival material. His use of wood, metals and stone in his pieces set them apart so go to www.moma.org for more information.

Mark your calendars for a show in Brooklyn. Lasting until April 2018, Rodin at the Brooklyn Museum: The Body in Bronze celebrates the 100th anniversary of the sculptor’s death. In yet another tribute to Rodin, 58 of the artist’s bronzes will be on display. To learn more the museum’s website, www.brooklynmuseum.org will clue you in about this exhibit.

Josef Albers in Mexico is open through April 18, 2018 at the Guggenheim Museum in New York. Well known for his paintings of concentric squares, this show focuses on his work that was influenced by his trips to Mexico. The artist and his wife made close to a dozen trips south of the border from 1935-1967 as he was able to relate to the abstract forms he encountered there. Feel free to check www.guggenheim.org for information and make sure to listen to various curators talk about the challenges of restoring Red Lilly Pads, an Alexander Calder mobile. The museum is also featuring the work of Constantin Brâncuși, one of the most important sculptors of the 20th century. The Guggenheim started collecting his work in the 1950s and it is their impressive collection that is on display through the spring of this year.

Thomas Cole’s Journey: Atlantic Crossings is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York until May of this year. Considered an American painter, Cole was born in England but immigrated to the United States at a young age. This exhibit shows the influences of European artists such as Turner and Constable on his work. Cole also mentored American landscape artists Church and Durand and places him in a global context. Birds of a Feather: Joseph Cornell’s Homage to Juan Gris is at the Met through April 15, 2018. On a trip to the Janis Gallery in Manhattan, Cornell was taken with a work on display by Juan Gris titled The Man at the Café. Subsequently the artist began a new series of 18 boxes, 2 collages and 1 sand tray dedicated to Gris. This exhibition puts together the Gris Cubist work that inspired the series with a dozen boxes from Cornell’s work dedicated to the artist that he called a kindred spirit. Information on these wonderful shows can be found at www.metmuseum.org as well as dates and times.

The Boston Museum of Fine Arts has a remarkable exhibit to catch before it leaves July 1, 2018. Mark Rothko: Reflection. This show features 11 of Rothko’s paintings that are placed in a contemplative setting shown as the artist intended. Juxtaposed with paintings like Artist in his Studio by Rembrandt, and side by side with works by other artists, the show intends to place Rothko in context, not necessarily as an artist who broke tradition but within the continuity of Western art. He is one of my favorite artists. Be sure and look at www.mfa.org. to find more information.

Georgia O’Keeffe: Art, Image, Style is at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts through April 1, 2018. It is a popular exhibit that moved to this venue with 50 works of art, 50 pieces of clothing and close to 100 photos. Many of the photos are by Stieglitz but there are some by Ansel Adams and Warhol and there are videos of Stieglitz and O’Keeffe walking together. The place to find more information is www.pem.org and get a view of the exhibit.

Winnie-the-Pooh: Exploring a Classic is at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London until April 8, 2018. This exhibit explores all things Winnie-the-Pooh through sketches, letters, photographs, fashion, ceramics and cartoons. Be sure to check online to see visions of this interactive exhibit. I am looking at my collection of Winnie-the-Pooh books as I type and imagining what Winnie, Piglet, Eeyore and Robin are up to. When I was in the 6th grade my teacher, Mrs. Gahagan, assigned each student in our class to research an ocean liner company. That is how she spent her summers…by traveling to foreign spots via ocean cruise. A few years later the city of Long Beach bought the Queen Mary where it still sits in that harbor. For me the prospect of an exhibit centered on that mode of travel brings back childhood memories of a slower, more romantic era. Ocean Liners: Speed and Style is on view until June 17, 2018. It includes various objects, clothing and posters from famous ships like the Titanic, the Queen Mary, the Canberra and the Normandie. For more information check these out at www.vam.ac.uk if these are of interest.

The Tate Liverpool draws from their Artist Rooms collection to put together Roy Lichtenstein In Focus, which is on tap until the middle of June this year. It includes 20 works by the famous Pop Artist. Especially significant is the inclusion of the only work on film by the artist which was completed in 1969 during a two week sojourn to Universal Studios. Coming up March 8-September 9, 2018 at the Tate Modern is the EY Exhibition Picasso 1932: Love, Fame, Tragedy. I am looking forward to an amazing show. By the way, the Tate St. Ives is hosting Virginia Woolf: An Exhibition Inspired By Her Writings through April 29, 2018. It features works by over 80 artists including some by her sister Vanessa Bell and Barbara Hepworth. For more information on these exhibits www.tate.org.uk will have everything you need to know. While you are there, check out the amazing videos at the site about various exhibitions.

The Petworth House in Sussex is known for its wonderful gardens. However, it hosts an important exhibit, William Blake in Sussex: Visions of Albion. Blake resided in Sussex for three years, the only time he lived outside of London. This show features 50 loans from such prestigious venues as the British Museum, V&A and the Tate. This is the first time these works have been seen together. There are also special tours of Blake’s cottage. If you are in England you won’t want to miss this exhibit so go to www.nationaltrust.org.uk/petworth-house-and-park for a preview. The exhibit ends March 25, 2018.

The Royal Academy of Arts in London has gathered much of the incredible artwork assembled by King Charles I. Charles I: King and Collector is at the Royal Academy through April 15, 2018. His collection included works by Titian, Mantegna, Holbein, and Dürer. He also commissioned paintings from Van Dyke and Rubens. After his execution, his collection was sold off so this is the first time since the 17th Century that the paintings can be seen together. Over 100 works of art make up this show, including sculptures, tapestries, miniatures and paintings. To see these fabulous works go to www.royalacademy.org.uk for samples from this exhibit.

So many exciting exhibits are coming to the Musée D’Orsay in Paris. Picasso: Blue and Rose opens in September. In November Renoir Father and Son: Painting and Cinema will be at the museum followed by Berthe Morisot: Female Impressionist and Degas at the Opera scheduled for 2019. Meanwhile at the Musée de l’Orangerie, The Water Lilies: The American Abstract Art and the last Monet opens April 11- August 20, 2018. One of Monet’s Water Lilies was brought to the Museum of Modern Art in 1955 at the time when the Abstract Expressionists were working in New York. This painting seen in the context of paintings like Pollock’s Autumn Rhythm shows the general influence Monet had on these American artists. The exhibit features some of Monet’s later works and about twenty paintings by artists such as Rothko, Still, Newman, and Morris Lewis, as well as many others. Check out www.musee-orsay.fr if you will be in Paris for this show.

Simply the Best:

The best place to find books on the arts, Arcana is a very special bookstore located in the Helms Bakery complex in Los Angeles…it is wonderful! I have known owner Lee Kaplan for decades and his selection of books is as superb as his taste is impeccable. Arcana: Books on the Arts is at 8675 Washington Boulevard, Culver City, CA 90232. For information go to  http://www.arcanabooks.com  or call 310.458.1499.

Michiko Jewelry Design is an incredible jewelry store in downtown Seal Beach, CA, featuring excellent one-of-a-kind gifts. The shop owner and artist, Carol Matsumoto, custom designs beautiful pieces. Michiko is at 228 Main Street. Call 563.431.3237 for more information or check www.michikojewelrydesign.com

Places to Go, People to See

One of California’s great architectural treasures, along with Hearst Castle to the north, The Adamson House and Malibu Lagoon Museum is a spectacular Spanish Colonial style home overlooking the Pacific Ocean. It was built in 1929 and most of its contents are original with wonderful Malibu Tile work. It is open to the public Thursday – Saturday and you can take a tour between 1-3pm. Get all the information at www.adamsonhouse.org and see some wonderful photos of the house and grounds. My grandparents built their Southern California home around the same time. It was a Spanish style California bungalow and though it was much smaller and not at all elaborate, I still love this kind of special architecture.

There is always something going on at Hearst Castle. A new tour has been added which focuses on the art contained in this monument. It is a two hour Art of San Simeon Tour which focuses on the acquisition of the furniture, décor and art in the castle. This will be going on now through the Spring and is $100 per person. The castle website, at www.hearstcastle.org, offers help with booking a tour.

If you are on your way to Honolulu be sure and stop by the Bishop Museum. It houses a Planetarium and is part of NASA’s Earth Observing Mission. The museum was founded in 1889 with the purpose of preserving the natural and cultural history of Hawaii and the Pacific. Current exhibitions include Holo Moana: Generations of Voyaging and Exhibition Dinosaur. There is much to see at this museum so go to www.bishopmuseum.org for more news from Honolulu.

Meanwhile, in the California desert, there is an annual art invitational going on. California’s largest state park, Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, is known for the beauty of its spring flower proliferation. It is also home to the Borrego Art Institute in Borrego Springs. Beginning on March 5, 2018, 15 invited artists will begin painting outdoors and their paintings will be judged and hung in the Institute until April 1, 2018. The 12th Annual Borrego Springs Plein Air Invitational is one of the highlights of the year but the BAI offers art classes and workshops through April. As a growing cultural institution, the BAI caters to all the arts and features many changing exhibits so go to www.borregoartinstitute.org and get an idea of what is offered.

Addendum:
        
The Pasadena Museum of California Art is dedicated to the exploring and presenting California art and design. California is a unique state due to its landscape variations and rich cultural mix. Currently the museum presents, through June 3, Testament of the Spirit: Paintings by Eduardo Carrillo. Mr. Carrillo was a teacher and social activist who helped spotlight Chicano art and culture. The museum has undertaken a project, in association with this exhibit, to house a wonderful mural that was done in 1970 as a project for the UCLA Studies Research Center. Chicano History is a collaborative work done by artists Eduardo Carrillo, Ramses Noriega, Sergio Hernandez and Dr. Saul Solache. This is the first time it has been shown in 28 years. The museum is seeking donations to help with transportation and installation costs. All in necessary information is at www.pmcaonline.org if you would like to learn more about the museum or if you would like to donate.

Continue to check back as we will be posting upcoming shows here and on the exhibits page of my website…and again, there is always Facebook. 

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